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As one of the oldest emergency medicine residencies in the country, the Sparrow/MSU EM Residency-Lansing, conducted within the Sparrow Health System and McLaren-Greater Lansing, has a long and vibrant history of existence.  
As one of the oldest emergency medicine residencies in the country, the Sparrow/MSU EM Residency-Lansing, conducted within the Sparrow Health System and McLaren-Greater Lansing, has a long and vibrant history of excellence.  


More than 35 years ago, Dr. John Wiegenstein began the arduous process of establishing the specialty of Emergency Medicine in the medical field. Generally considered the father of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Wiegenstein was the first president of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) and worked for decades at McLaren Hospital. He served as faculty in the residency until his retirement, and was a man of great vision.
More than 35 years ago, Dr. John Wiegenstein began the arduous process of establishing the specialty of Emergency Medicine within the medical profession. Generally considered the father of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Wiegenstein was the first president of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) and worked for decades at McLaren Hospital. He served as faculty in the residency until his retirement, and was a man of great vision.


Dr. Wiegenstein recruited dedicated faculty and established a collegial relationship between two healthcare systems in Lansing, Michigan.  He also developed a long-standing relationship between the residency and Michigan State University College of Human Medicine and College of Osteopathic Medicine that still exists today. We have the privilege of being affiliated with Michigan State University, a Big Ten school with all the attributes including a College of Veterinary Medicine, while retaining the community training focus. This model has served our residents well.
Dr. Wiegenstein recruited dedicated faculty and established a collegial relationship between two healthcare systems in Lansing, Michigan.  He also developed a long-standing relationship between the residency and Michigan State University College of Human Medicine and College of Osteopathic Medicine that still exists today. We have the privilege of being affiliated with Michigan State University, a Big Ten school with all the attributes including a College of Veterinary Medicine, while retaining the community training focus. This model has served our residents well.

Revision as of 19:26, 22 April 2016

As one of the oldest emergency medicine residencies in the country, the Sparrow/MSU EM Residency-Lansing, conducted within the Sparrow Health System and McLaren-Greater Lansing, has a long and vibrant history of excellence.

More than 35 years ago, Dr. John Wiegenstein began the arduous process of establishing the specialty of Emergency Medicine within the medical profession. Generally considered the father of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Wiegenstein was the first president of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) and worked for decades at McLaren Hospital. He served as faculty in the residency until his retirement, and was a man of great vision.

Dr. Wiegenstein recruited dedicated faculty and established a collegial relationship between two healthcare systems in Lansing, Michigan. He also developed a long-standing relationship between the residency and Michigan State University College of Human Medicine and College of Osteopathic Medicine that still exists today. We have the privilege of being affiliated with Michigan State University, a Big Ten school with all the attributes including a College of Veterinary Medicine, while retaining the community training focus. This model has served our residents well.

The philosophy of our residency is one of community training with university affiliation to create physicians who are skilled in emergency medicine, able to work in any setting, and who care for patients from all walks of life equally. Our graduates have traveled the globe, achieved fellowship status in many sub-specialties, become leaders in national organizations, program directors, department directors, Heroes of Emergency Medicine, and leaders in their communities. Lansing has served as the home of ACEP, SAEM, and ABEM, and the Executive Director of ABEM is one of our former graduates and a former program director as well. ACEP, ACOEP, and ABEM have been well-served by our graduates, with many achieving fellowship within these organizations.

Leadership

  • Program Director: David Castle, DO
  • Associate/Assistant Program Director: David Betten, MD; Brent Felton, DO
  • Ultrasound Director: Spyros Boukouris, MD, RDMS
  • Research Director: Brent Felton, DO
  • Program Coordinator: Renee Day

Training Locations

Primary Hospital

E.W. Sparrow Hospital

Secondary Hospital

McLaren-Greater Lansing Hospital

Sparrow Carson Hospital

Curriculum

PGY1

PGY2

PGY3

Electives

Clinical Investigation/Ultrasound -- 1 - 2 weeks

ENT -- 2 weeks

Forensic Pathology -- 1-2 weeks

Radiology -- 1 week

Toxicology -- 1 week

Urology -- 1-2 weeks

Emergency Ultrasound -- 1-4 weeks

Pediatric Sedation -- 1-2 weeks

Senior Teaching E.M. Rotation -- 1-4 weeks

Manual Medicine/OMM -- 2-4 weeks

PICU -- 3-4 weeks

Research -- 2 weeks

ED administration -- 1 weeks

Legal -- 1 week

Oral Surgery -- 1 week

Fellowships

Surgical Critical Care

Michigan State University College of Human Medicine

Department of Surgery

Contact Information

Renee Day (Program Coordinator)

Office: (517) 364-2583

Email: Renee.Day@sparrow.org

Fax: (517) 364-3002

Mailing address: Sparrow Hospital, 1215 East Michigan Ave., Lansing, MI 48912

External Links

http://www.emlansing.org

See Also